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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë

Few novels sweep readers into a storm of emotion quite like Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights—a book that arrives with thunder, leaves with lightning, and somehow manages to remain irresistibly magnetic after nearly two centuries. Equal parts Gothic drama, psychological portrait, and meditation on love at its most destructive, this 1847 classic has secured its place as one of literature’s most haunting works.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Dec 05, 2025

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

The Trilogy—Molloy, Malone Dies, The Unnamable by Samuel Beckett

There are books that tell stories, and then there are books that quietly unravel the idea of storytelling itself. Samuel Beckett’s The Trilogy—Molloy, Malone Dies, and The Unnamable—belongs unapologetically to the latter category. Written in the wake of World War II, these three novels dive into the collapsing architecture of identity, memory, and meaning with a kind of mischievous intensity that only Beckett could pull off.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Dec 02, 2025

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Le Père Goriot by Honoré de Balzac

If you’ve ever wondered how far ambition, money, and family obligations can twist a life, Honoré de Balzac’s Le Père Goriot delivers a masterclass—set not in corporate boardrooms or political arenas, but in a dingy Paris boarding house where dreams go to either sharpen or die. Published in 1835, this novel sits at the heart of Balzac’s monumental series La Comédie Humaine, and it continues to resonate thanks to its biting realism and unflinching look at social aspiration.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Nov 30, 2025

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Post 100 Books You Must Read

Book of Job – Why This Ancient Tale Still Sparks Modern Reflection

Few works in world literature tackle life’s most uncomfortable questions with as much poetic force as the Book of Job. This ancient text peers directly into the paradox of suffering, justice, and human resilience—without blinking. While it sits within the biblical canon, it has traveled far beyond religious boundaries, influencing philosophers, novelists, theologians, and anyone who has ever muttered, “Why me?” into the void. Its endurance isn’t accidental. The Book of Job remains significant because it doesn’t offer easy answers—just a profoundly human journey through loss, doubt, dialogue, and ultimately, perspective.

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Theodoros Kafantaris

Nov 26, 2025

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